1 / 25

Outline

Outline. In the news? Examples from students? Reading Takehome messages Complete trade lecture from last Thurs Situation of developing countries Hunger Game State of development (video) Solutions to development Structural adjustment Globalization. Reading Takehome messages.

janus
Download Presentation

Outline

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Outline • In the news? Examples from students? • Reading Takehome messages • Complete trade lecture from last Thurs • Situation of developing countries • Hunger Game • State of development (video) • Solutions to development • Structural adjustment • Globalization

  2. Reading Takehome messages • Milner “Globalization, development, and international institutions” • IMF, WB, and WTO offer possibility of helping with respect to development but they don’t always deliver on their promise for identifiable reasons • Research can allow us to improve these institutions • Micklethwait and Wooldridge “The globalization backlash” explores myths that globalization • Means the Triumph of Giant Companies • Is Destroying the Environment • Makes Geography Irrelevant • Means Americanization • Means a Race to the Bottom in Labor Standards • Concentrates Power in Undemocratic Institutions Like the WTO • Is Irreversible

  3. Institutions:International Labor Organization • Convention concerning Equal Remuneration for Men and Women Workers for Work of Equal Value • “ensure the application to all workers of the principle of equal remuneration for men and women workers for work of equal value”

  4. http://cep.lse.ac.uk/leed/docs/public/genderpay_simon2.pdf and http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0882775.html

  5. Types of protectionism

  6. The situation of developing states and its causes • The facts • Structure of world economy • Standpoint analysis: legacy of racial colonialism • Policy errors and domestic elites • Monopsonistic purchasers of exports • Monopolistic suppliers of imports • Debt burden

  7. 1: Access to Clean Water?Two groups • Form two groups: • Yes: > 70%. Stay put and have clean water. • No: < 70%. Walk to get dirty water. • Interpretation: % of population in your country with access to clean water. • Globally: approximately 20% of the world population (1.5 billion people) do NOT have access to clean water. Many people must walk over a mile to get water and it is often not clean.

  8. 2: Health care?line from high to low • Form line from highest to lowest • Norway, US, Mongolia: 250 doctors/100,000 people • 9 countries: 100 - 250 doctors/100,000 people • 8 countries: 25 - 100 doctors/100,000 people • 8 countries: less than 25 doctors/100,000 people • Interpretation: number of doctors per 100,000 people in your country • Globally: healthcare is FAR more available in developed countries and Latin America than it is in Africa

  9. 3: Energy?Three groups • Form three groups: • 5,000 and up • 500 – 5000 • under 500 • Interpretation: sticks represent energy consumption. Number is kilowatt hours of electricity per capita. • Globally: Look at distribution across cards

  10. 4: Per capita income?Three groups • Form three groups: • Group 1 - $10,000 + • Group 2 - $1,500 - $10,000 • Group 3 - under $1,000 • Interpretation: average per capita income of people in each country. Average, but a few who have much more, many much less • Globally: • developed states average = $26,000/person • Latin America average = $7,000/person • South Asia average = $2,700/person • Sub Saharan Africa average = $1,800/person

  11. Global income distribution is severely skewed • Annual income flows of the richest 500 people exceeds that of the poorest 416 million • Cost of ending extreme poverty – $300 billion – less than 2% of the income of the richest 10% of the world’s population Inequality of world incomes: what should be done? R. Wade http://www.opendemocracy.net/themes/article.jsp?id=6&articleId=257Human Development Report 2005: The World at a Crossroads. http://www.undp-kuwait.org/Downloads/HDR2005_En.pdf

  12. 5: Nutrition?Four groups • Form 4 groups: • Developed countries • Latin America • Asia • Africa • Interpretation: % of children younger than 5 years old who are underweight. • Globally: Enough food in world but not well distributed. Many children and adults are hungry and malnourished. 900 million undernourished children; 25% of children underweight.

  13. The State of Development(as presented by an expert) • Hans Rosling talk

  14. Source: http://www.xolimited.com/download/rpt/31.pdf

  15. Trends in Terms of Trade, 1980-2001 Developing countries’ exports of agricultural products now can buy less food AND fewer manufactured goods Does this ranking correlate with race? If we could see it by gender, what would you expect to see? Source: http://www.worldmapper.org/data/nomap/353_worldmapper_data.xls

  16. Trends in Terms of Trade, 1961-2002 Developing countries’ exports of agricultural products now can buy less food AND fewer manufactured goods Source: http://www.worldmapper.org/data/nomap/353_worldmapper_data.xls

  17. Solutions to Problems of Development • Autonomy • International institutions • Collective bargaining • Socialist revolution and NIEO • Liberal orthodoxy • Structural adjustment policies

  18. Structural Adjustment • What’s involved? • Devaluing currency. • Reducing trade and FDI barriers • Government reform of state enterprises • Reduce or eliminate budget deficits • Get government out of marketplace • How rich impose structural adjustment on poor • IMF loans impose structural adjustment as a condition of loan

  19. Globalization • "Social, economic and technological unification of the globe" (Gilpin in Art/Jervis, 353). • Increasing-but not fairer-flows of everything • Due to: • Technological change • Economic pressure • Social pressures • Deliberate governmental policy

  20. Globalization as Power Shift • Globalization: major change in who has power • State cannot control flows as did before • From developing to industrialized states • From governments to multinationals • From industrialized states to transnational actors • From governments to international institutions • Greater concentrations of power PLUS sometimes empowering the less powerful

More Related